| Literature DB >> 28743277 |
Josefine Persson1,2, Lars-Åke Levin3,4, Lukas Holmegaard3, Petra Redfors3, Katarina Jood3, Christina Jern5, Christian Blomstrand3,6, Gunilla Forsberg-Wärleby3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Healthcare interventions that have positive effects on the stroke survivors' health-related quality of life (HRQoL) and quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs) might also have positive effects for their spouses in terms of improved HRQoL and/or reduced spousal informal support. However, knowledge about stroke survivors' HRQoL and QALY and the consequences for their spouses' HRQoL and QALY is limited. Therefore, the aim of this study was to describe the HRQoL and QALY-weights in dyads of stroke survivors in comparison with dyads of healthy controls, and to study the relationship between the stroke survivors' QALY-weights and consequences for spouses in terms of QALY-weight and annual cost of informal support, using a long-term perspective.Entities:
Keywords: Dyadic perspective.; Health-related quality of life; Quality-adjusted life-years; Spousal informal support; Stroke
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28743277 PMCID: PMC5526309 DOI: 10.1186/s12955-017-0724-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Qual Life Outcomes ISSN: 1477-7525 Impact factor: 3.186
Fig. 1Flowchart of study population
Fig. 2The time-diary
Demographic features of the sample
| Spouses of stroke survivors (%) ( | Stroke survivors (%) ( | Spouses of controls (%) ( | Controls (%) ( | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean age, y (SD) | 63 (11) | 64 (11) | 64 (9) | 65 (9) |
| Female sex | 162 (65) | 85 (34) | 161 (66) | 84 (34) |
| Education | ||||
| Secondary or less | 96 (39) | 92 (37) | 71 (29) | 83 (34) |
| High school | 77 (31) | 87 (35) | 89 (36) | 87 (36) |
| University | 75 (30) | 68 (28) | 85 (35) | 74 (30) |
| Occupation | ||||
| Employed fulltime | 73 (29) | 30 (12) | 58 (24) | 72 (30) |
| Retired fulltime | 122 (49) | 148 (60) | 132 (54) | 145 (56) |
| Othera | 53 (21) | 70 (28) | 55 (22) | 28 (14) |
| Household | ||||
| Children <18 at | 28 (11) | 22 (9) | ||
| Support in home | ||||
| Informal supportb | 80 (32) | 8 (3) | ||
| Formal supportc | 25 (10) | 0 (0) | ||
aOther: Employed part-time, retired part-time, unemployed, sick leave and being a student
bInformal support: Self-reported information from the spouse concerning whether they provided informal support to their partner
cFormal support: Home care, personal assistant, or living at nursing home
Health-related Quality of Life and SF-6D QALY-weights for dyads of stroke survivors and dyads of controls
| Spouses of stroke survivor | Stroke survivor | Mean difference | Spouses of controls | Controls | Mean difference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Physical functioning | 84 (21) | 67 (30) | 17 (31)*** | 87 (18) | 87 (16) | 0 (21) |
| Role, physical | 79 (36) | 65 (41) | 14 (49) *** | 86 (32) | 86 (31) | 0 (42) |
| Bodily pain | 72 (27) | 71 (29) | 1 (36) | 76 (26) | 79 (24) | 3 (35) |
| General health | 72 (23) | 63 (23) | 9 (28)*** | 76 (21) | 78 (18) | 2 (24) |
| Vitality | 66 (24) | 57 (25) | 8 (30)*** | 73 (22) | 76 (19) | 3 (25) |
| Social functioning | 87 (21) | 81 (25) | 6 (31)** | 91 (19) | 92 (17) | 1 (23) |
| Role, emotional | 81 (35) | 80 (36) | 0 (49) | 90 (27) | 93 (23) | 3 (31) |
| Mental health | 78 (20) | 76 (20) | 2 (25) | 84 (16) | 86 (15) | 2 (19) |
| SF-6D QALY-weight | 0.75 (0.12) | 0.70 (0.12) | 0.05 (0.15)*** | 0.77 (0.11) | 0.78 (0.10) | 0.01 (0.14) |
Mean with standard deviations in parenthesis
Wilcoxon signed ranks test with following level of significance: ***1%, **5%, *10%
Estimating spouses’ QALY-weights as a function of patients’ QALY-weights with an ordinary least squared regression
| Model 1 | Model 2 | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ß |
| ß |
| |
| QALY-weight | 0.205 | <0.001 | 0.187 | 0.002 |
| Spouses’ age | -0.001 | 0.230 | ||
| Spouses’ sex | ||||
| Malea | 0.008 | 0.623 | ||
| Education | ||||
| High schoolb | -0.013 | 0.454 | ||
| Universityb | -0.011 | 0.550 | ||
| Occupation | ||||
| Retiredc | -0.060 | 0.010 | ||
| Otherc | -0.064 | 0.002 | ||
| Constant | 0.607 | <0.001 | 0.680 | <0.001 |
| R squared | 0.048 | 0.142 | ||
| Observations | 242 | 242 | ||
The regression analyses were based on a sample of 242 due to missing SF-6D index for 3 stroke survivors and 3 spouses
Other: Employed part-time, retired part-time, unemployed, sick leave and being a student
Following references are used:
aFemales
bSecondary school or less
cEmployed
Fig. 3Spouses’ informal support in practical support (a) and being available (b) in mean hours per day per stroke survivors’ QALY-weight adjusted for formal support and spouses’ occupational status and including 95% CI error bars estimated by percentile bootstrap with 1000 replications
Annual cost of spouses’ practical support and being available per stroke survivors’ QALY-weight. Costs are presented in € (2015)
| Stroke survivors QALY-weight | Practical support |
| Being available |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0.40 | 9009 (1339–16,680) | <0.021 | 6697 (-1581–14,976) | 0.113 |
| 0.50 | 5787 (2233–9341) | <0.001 | 5398 (574–10,221) | 0.028 |
| 0.60 | 3134 (1673–4594) | <0.001 | 3697 (1091–6305) | 0.005 |
| 0.70 | 1460 (602–2318) | <0.001 | 2225 (293–4156) | 0.024 |
| 0.80 | 609 (12–1205) | 0.046 | 1230 (-340–2859) | 0.139 |
| 0.90 | 233 (-112–578) | 0.185 | 648 (-578–1874) | 0.300 |
| 1.00 | 85 (-85–254) | 0.328 | 334 (-498–1165) | 0.432 |
Costs are adjusted for formal support and spouses’ occupational status, with 95% confidence intervals estimated by percentile bootstrap with 1000 replications